Video: Want to know how to sear a roast to perfection?  This video, at TellMeHowToDoThis.com, will show you how to perfectly sear meat!
  Ending Frustration through How-To Videos!
141 how-to Videos    |    405 how-to Categories     |   0 how-to Comments 

ShowMeHow    |  Categories  |    Search   |  Subscribe  {RSS/XMLForum  |  TagsAsk / Add Video    

Email How to Sear a Roast to a friend

How to Sear a Roast





























AnimationAtStart="1" AutoSize="true" DisplaySize="0" AutoStart="false" ShowControls="1" ShowStatusBar="1" uiMode="full" AllowChangeDisplaySize="true">

Click to add comments for "How to Sear a Roast"
Other How to's Related to Meat

How to Sear a Roast

How to Classic Tie a Roast for Visual Perfection

How to Quick Tie a Roast

How to Form Perfect Meatballs

How to Make Awesome Hamburger Patties


How to Sear a Roast is from www.epicurious.com

A friend of mine (as well as my mom, when I was growing up), said something to the effect of "did you know that the point of searing a roast (or any other meat) is to keep the juices inside?"

Are you sure that searing actually keeps the juices inside?

Searing
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Searing (or pan searing) is a technique used in grilling, roasting, braising, sautéing, etc. that cooks the surface of the food (usually meat, poultry or fish) at high temperature so that a caramelized crust forms. A similar technique, browning, is typically used to sear or brown all sides of a particular piece of meat, fish, poultry, etc. before finishing it in the oven.

It is commonly believed that this acts to lock in the moisture or "seal in the juices" of the food. However, it has been scientifically shown that searing results in a greater net loss of moisture versus cooking to the same internal temperature without first searing. Nonetheless it remains an essential technique in cooking meat for several reasons:

The browning creates desirable flavors through caramelization and the Maillard reaction.
The appearance of the food is usually improved with a well-browned crust.

The contrast in taste and texture between the crust and the interior makes the food more interesting to the palate.

Typically in grilling the food will be seared over very high heat and then moved to a lower-temperature area of the grill. In braising, the seared surface acts to flavor, color and otherwise enrich the liquid in which the food is being cooked.


Sealing in the juices
The belief that searing meat "seals in the juices" is widespread and still often repeated. This theory was first put forth by Justus von Liebig, a German chemist and food scientist, around 1850. The notion was embraced by contemporary cooks and authors including Auguste Escoffier.

Simple experimentation can test the theory: cook two similar cuts of meat, searing one first and not the other. Weigh the end results to see which loses more moisture. (The Food Network program Good Eats carried out such a test in episode EA1H22, Myth Smashers.) As early as the 1930s, such experiments were carried out; the seared roasts lost the same amount of moisture or more. (Generally more, since searing exposes the meat to higher temperatures.)

In short, the crust created by searing is in no way waterproof. Moisture in liquid and vapor form can and does continue to escape from a seared piece of meat.

See more from these categories:
 Entertaining [xml]
 Food [xml]
 Hobbies [xml]
 Home and Garden [xml]
 Meat [xml]
 People [xml]
See more how-to's related to:







BookMark How to Sear a Roast to your favorite site(s) below
BlinkList | del.icio.us | Digg it | Furl | Linkroll | ma.gnolia | Netvouz | RawSugar | reddit | Scuttle | Shadows | Simpy | Spurl | Yahoo MyWeb | Onlywire | Email to a friend

See other How-To's about:
 Get email updates from the Entertaining category. Entertaining [xml]
 Get email updates from the Food category. Food [xml]
 Get email updates from the Hobbies category. Hobbies [xml]
 Get email updates from the Home and Garden category. Home and Garden [xml]
 Get email updates from the Meat category. Meat [xml]
 Get email updates from the People category. People [xml]

To subscribe by email to a category above, click the next to it.
Bookmark (How to Sear a Roast) to your favorite site(s) below
Email How to Sear a Roast to a friend add How to Sear a Roast to Digg add How to Sear a Roast to Del.icio.us add How to Sear a Roast to Wist add How to Sear a Roast to Spurl add How to Sear a Roast to Simpy add How to Sear a Roast to Reddit add How to Sear a Roast to Newsvine add How to Sear a Roast to Furl add How to Sear a Roast to Fark add How to Sear a Roast to Blinklist add How to Sear a Roast to Yahoo add How to Sear a Roast to Comments add How to Sear a Roast to Smarking add How to Sear a Roast to Shadows add How to Sear a Roast to Scuttle add How to Sear a Roast to Rawsugar add How to Sear a Roast to Netvous add How to Sear a Roast to Magnolia add How to Sear a Roast to linkagogo add How to Sear a Roast to feedmelinks add How to Sear a Roast to delirious add How to Sear a Roast to connotea add How to Sear a Roast to blogmarks add How to Sear a Roast to blinkbits add How to Sear a Roast to tailrank
 
Our most recent HowTo Video additions:

How to Clean Your Windows


How to Remove Wax


How to Clean Vents


How to Play "100 years" on the Piano


How to Make an Ethernet Patch Cable (RJ45)


How to Knit - Making a Knit Stitch


How to Knit: Casting Off, Binding Off


How to Make a Friendship Bracelet


How to Make a Spud Gun (a Potato Gun)


How to do Soldering: Melting Separate Medals Together


If How to Sear a Roast is your video, and you believe it's here without your consent, please refer to our DMCA policy.

Add your thoughts for How to Sear a Roast

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by TellMeHowToDoThis.com before your comment will appear. Thanks for being patient!)

 

 

 

About  |  Blog  |  Win Money  |  FAQ | Contact / JV or Affiliate / Ads | SiteMap | TOS / Privacy / DMCA / GNU